An isosceles triangle has two equal side and angle measurements.
No because the given lengths don't comply with Pythagoras' theorem for a right angle triangle.
No. For a right angle triangle, the sum of the squares of the shorter sides equals the square of the longer side (the hypotenuse): 22 + 62 = 40 72 = 49
If it is an isosceles triangle then the missing side is 40 cm but for any triangle the sum of its two smaller sides must be greater than its longest side.
40 degrees ! The internal angles of any triangle always total 180 degrees. Since you already know two angles (50 & 90) - the difference is 40.
A right triangle, whose the length measure of the side opposite to the angle of 30 degrees is one half of the length measure of the hypotenuse.
An isosceles triangle has two equal side and angle measurements.
50 degrees
No because the given lengths don't comply with Pythagoras' theorem for a right angle triangle.
The other acute angle in that triangle is 40 degrees.
A right triangle with a hypotenuse of 40 inches and a side of 8 inches has a leg length of 39.19 inches so the shorter leg IS 8 inches.
It is 40 inches in length
No. For a right angle triangle, the sum of the squares of the shorter sides equals the square of the longer side (the hypotenuse): 22 + 62 = 40 72 = 49
40 metres.
If it is an isosceles triangle then the missing side is 40 cm but for any triangle the sum of its two smaller sides must be greater than its longest side.
40 degrees ! The internal angles of any triangle always total 180 degrees. Since you already know two angles (50 & 90) - the difference is 40.
It depends on what is known about the triangle.